Talk about cognitive dissonance in Washington, D.C.. The White House, members of Congress, the State Department and Department of Defense are all denouncing the release of hundreds of thousands of classified documents by Wikileaks.

What the newspapers and politicians do not remind you of is these documents were leaked by Private Bradley E. Manning, a gay soldier.

At the same time all are up in arms about PVT Manning's leaks, the White House, members of Congress and the Department of Defense are pushing to repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell (DADT). DADT is the policy that allowed Private Manning to join the Army and eventually betray his nation. Ginger Thompson stated, in a

, that in Wales, OK "classmates made fun of him for being gay". Ginger noted that former neighbors in Oklahoma described the young Manning as "opinionated beyond his years about politics, religion, and even about keeping religion out of politics.", and that in the Army, Manning's "social life was defined by the need to conceal his sexuality under 'don't ask, don't tell' ". At a young age Manning was part of the gay agenda, which includes pushing gay rights via politics as well as denouncing opposition to the gay lifestyle by churches and religious organizations. He essentially became obsessed with the repeal of DADT.